U.S. labor in the
crisis
Resistance or
retreat?
By Lee Sustar
International
Socialist Review, July–August 2009
The election of
Barack Obama last November seemed to promise a new era for
organized labor. With Obama in the White House and a solid
Democratic majority in Congress, it appeared that unions
would finally be able to get action on their main
legislative agenda–passage of the Employee Free Choice Act
(EFCA), a measure that would make it easier for workers to
join a union. And with the world’s press gathered outside
Obama’s Chicago home during the transition period, a
victorious factory occupation at the Republic Windows and
Doors plant in that city captured the imagination of the
country, and even got some encouraging words from Obama
himself.
Soon afterwards,
workers at the huge Smithfield pork processing plant in
North Carolina voted to unionize after more than a decade of
vicious anti-union actions by the company. Hopes were high
that unions were set to go on the offensive.
A few months later,
the picture is quite different. The chances for the passage
of EFCA appear bleak. The biggest union in the country, the
Service Employees International Union (SEIU), was embroiled
in the undemocratic takeover of its 150,000-member West
Coast health care local.1
At the same time,
the SEIU intervened in the internal conflict of another
union, UNITE HERE, once its closest ally, to annex 150,000
members of a breakaway faction. The old UNITE leader, Bruce
Raynor sought refuge in the SEIU because, he claimed, the
HERE side was spending organizing money wastefully; the top
HERE official, John Wilhelm, accused Raynor of bargaining
for low wages and poor working standards, Stern style, in
order to convince employers to allow unfettered organizing.
At stake is not only union jurisdiction over hotels and
casinos, but control of the only union-owned bank, the
Amalgamated Bank, which had $4.47 billion in assets in 2008.
2
As a result of this
internecine battle, the SEIUdominated Change to Win group of
unions was in tatters. A 2005 split from the AFL-CIO, the
Change to Win unions had failed to deliver a promised
breakthrough for labor. Instead, it was edging toward some
sort of reunification with the labor federation–but only
under pressure from the Obama administration, which insists
on the convenience of one-stop shopping when it deals with
the unions.3
Certainly the
Republic Windows and Doors occupation to win workers’
severance pay–and the solidarity and excitement that this
action garnered– remains an inspiration. But what followed
wasn’t similar victories, but one of the most catastrophic
setbacks in the history of the U.S. labor movement. Private
employers were demanding, and obtaining, concessions from
unions in industries ranging from newspapers to trucking
companies. Even as expectations of Obama mounted in advance
of Inauguration Day, Chrysler and General Motors were
slashing jobs and gutting union contracts as they drifted
toward bankruptcy amid the worst economic slump since the
Great Depression.
It was during that 1930s crisis that the United Auto Workers (UAW) stormed
onto the scene with dramatic factory occupations led by
communists, socialists, and other radicals. Today’s UAW,
though, is a vastly different organization. It has followed
its long-established strategy of partnership with employers
to an extreme conclusion by becoming, through health-care
trust funds, a major shareholder in GM alongside the U.S.
government and the majority (55 percent) shareholder in
Chrysler. To achieve this bizarre form of employee ownership–the
union trust fund will get just one seat on the company board–the
union agreed to ban strikes for six years, eliminate work
rules negotiated over decades, cut overtime pay, and further
concessions.4 The result of all this is the virtual
elimination of the difference between UAWorganized plants
and nonunion ones. The UAW, which once steadily raised the
bar for wages and benefits for the entire U.S. working class,
is now leading the way down.
The driving force in obtaining these concessions is the Obama administration,
which publicly claimed that it had been tougher on the UAW
than the Bush White House.5 Rather than use the $50 billion
nationalization of GM to launch a green industrialization
program, the Obama administration wants to create a slimmed-down
“new GM” while selling off unwanted assets at fire-sale
prices. This will intensify the crisis in the auto parts
industry.
Even mainstream liberal commentators were aghast at the terms of Obama’s
GM bailout. “Wouldn’t it be better to use the money to
convert GM and other declining manufacturing companies into
producing what America needs, such as light rail systems and
new energy efficient materials, and training laid-off
autoworkers for the technician jobs of the future?” said
former labor secretary Robert Reich.6 Rather than use GM to
create good paying jobs, the Obama plan will further
downsize GM’s UAW. “At the end of the 1970s, when the
first round of concession bargaining began in the U.S., the
UAW had 450,000 members at GM,” wrote Sam Gindin, a former
economist for the Canadian Auto Workers: Today, after
repeated contracts that allegedly “won” job security in
exchange for workplace, wage, or benefit concessions–sold
by the union as well as the companies– the UAW’s GM
membership is down to 64,000.
If GM is “successful” in its current restructuring, that will be further
reduced to 40,000. Thirty years of concessions and a 90
percent loss in jobs. If ever there was a failing strategy
for workers, this was it.7
The capitulation by UAW leaders has boosted the confidence of employers
everywhere in their effort to make workers pay for the
economic crisis. California governor Arnold Schwarzenegger
met no union resistance when he imposed unpaid leave on
state workers, which amounted to a 9.2 percent cut in pay.
He planned to seek another 5 percent cut as this article was
being written.8 Fifteen other state governors have made
similar moves.9
And when United Teachers Los Angeles (UTLA) dared to show resistance by
organizing for a one-day strike to protest layoffs, they
were hit with a judge’s temporary restraining order that
banned the action by threatening to levy fines that would
bankrupt the union and strip the credentials of any teacher
who walked out. The Los Angeles County Federation of Labor,
the most active of the big-city labor councils, failed to
mobilize in response.10
If union leaders can see a bit of a silver lining in one of these many
ominous clouds, it’s the appointment of a pro-union member
of Congress, Hilda Solis as labor secretary.11
But that’s little compensation for Obama’s leaveno- banker-behind
economic policy. So far, Obama’s funneled trillions in U.S.
taxpayer money into enormous bailouts for Wall Street,
compared with only modest tax cuts for workers and an
economic stimulus plan that will create far fewer jobs than
the six million jobs that the recession has already
destroyed.12
Besides this immediate onslaught, the U.S. working class faces an epochal
shift as the result of three intertwined crises: a
protracted economic crisis that will lead to plant closures
and layoffs (“restructuring” in the employers’
parlance); a generational transition in which younger
workers find that decently paid union jobs held by their
parents are no longer available; and a great demographic
shift in which immigrants account for an increasing share of
the working class. Before we can assess the prospects for
labor’s revival, we need to take account of these
developments and understand their economic, social, and
political implications.
Kim Moody, the veteran socialist, labor activist, and author, has made an
invaluable contribution to this task in his recent book, U.S.
Labor in Trouble and Transition.
Moody argues that organized labor, already weakened by decades of decline,
has become further disoriented and thrown onto the defensive
by several trends, including an aggressive attack on unions
by Corporate America, demographic change, and a
restructuring of manufacturing around “lean production”
that involved steady job loss– not simply as a result of
globalization, but through new labor-saving technology and a
shift to nonunion operations in the U.S. South. The analysis
that follows will take Moody’s work as a point of
departure.
Impact of the economic crisis
The recession–or perhaps, depression–is greatly exacerbating the
problems of the U.S. labor movement.
Even as the economic downturn began in December 2007, one labor economist
pointed out that, “17.5 percent of all unemployed workers
were long-term unemployed, compared with just 11.1 percent
in March 2001,” the start of the last recession.13
And if job growth had simply kept pace with the population increase, there
would have been an additional 3.2 million more jobs in the
U.S. economy by 2008.14 Today, workers are facing what the
Economic Policy Institute calls a “jobs desert,” with
joblessness at 9.4 percent in May 2009, the highest level
since 1983. One in four of the unemployed–some 3.9 million
people–had been jobless for at least six months.15
The leadership of organized labor has been unable– and in many case
unwilling–to resist job losses among unionized workers.
Rather, they have concentrated on organizing the
unorganized. This led to an increase in the numbers of
workers in unions by 311,000 in 2007 and by another 428,000
in 2008, bringing the so-called union density rate to 12.4
percent, up from 12.0 percent in 2006.16 These
gains–especially in the context of a recession–
highlight the fact that tens of millions of workers are
prepared to organize, a conclusion supported by recent
opinion polls.17
While these increases in unionization are important, the pace is far too
slow to change the balance of power between labor and
capital–and the recession and the anticipated “jobless
recovery” will likely wipe out these advances.
Further, unionization is down from about 35 percent in the mid 1950s. In the
private sector, union density is just 7.5 percent, a figure
comparable to that of a century ago. Yet even these stark
numbers fail to convey the extent of labor’s crisis. Half
the country’s union members (about eight million people)
live in just six states–New York, Pennsylvania, Illinois,
Ohio, Michigan, and California.
The South remains a bastion of anti-unionism, where six states had
unionization rates below 5 percent.18
The union bureaucracy has sought to overcome its crisis through political
solutions via the Democratic Party. And unions did play a
major role in Barack Obama’s presidential victory,
spending $300 million on the elections and mobilizing
enormous numbers of union staff and members.19 This led
labor to look forward to the political spoils–chiefly, the
passage of EFCA. But, as usual, organized labor badly
overestimated the support of its supposed Democratic friends
in Congress and the White House. Instead of using its
election field operation to launch a campaign for EFCA, the
unions pulled back just as big business geared up.20
Nevertheless, union leaders continue to look with hope
toward the Obama administration for a political solution to
their problems–if only because they have no other strategy
to deal with the employers’ escalating demands for
givebacks.
Indeed, the auto crisis is only the most egregious example of concessions
bargaining that has taken place since the onset of the
recession in December 2007. For example, Teamster officials
reopened a contract at YRC, the parent company of the Yellow
and Roadway freight haulers. Union officials agreed to, and
workers ratified, a 10 percent cut in pay and mileage
compensation. In return, the workers will get part ownership
in the company.21 YRC’s main unionized competitor, ABF, is
expected to demand similar givebacks.
Many other companies are pressing similar demands, reported the Bureau of
National Affairs (BNA), a private research company. Other
large contracts set to expire this year include regional
grocery store agreements covering 110,000 workers. Overall,
contracts covering 2.2 million private-sector workers will
come up for negotiation throughout 2009.22 It should be
added that most unions that took major concessions in the
last recession of 2001–such as the airlines–have still
not overcome the job losses and pay cuts that they took
then.
One big showdown could come at ATT, which demanded concessions this spring
in contracts that cover 100,000 workers. Despite $2.6
billion in profits last year, the company recently laid off
12,000 workers. Now management wants health-care concessions
that amount to a 7 to 10 percent pay cut.23 After mobilizing
for a possible strike, the CWA allowed an April 4 contract
deadline to pass without an agreement, apparently to allow
its other contracts with the company to expire to better
coordinate bargaining.
A notable exception to this concessions bargaining trend is Boeing Co.,
where a long strike by machinists last fall forced
management to back down on demands for virtually unlimited
outsourcing and minor gains on pensions.24
Boeing’s backlog of orders gave the union leverage despite the slump.
Nevertheless, the strike victory did not roll back previous
concessions on outsourcing and lowertier pay for new
workers. Moreover, despite a huge backlog of orders for new
airplanes, the economic slump has led Boeing to announce
10,000 layoffs.25
Meanwhile, in the public-sector, recession-driven budget cuts are leading to
layoffs and aggressive management demands at the bargaining
table. In New York City, billionaire Mayor Michael Bloomberg
has extracted $400 million in health-care concessions from
public-sector unions as he pushes to eliminate 2,000 jobs.26
New York governor David Paterson, a Democrat, backed off a
plan to lay off 9,000 state workers, will eliminate 7,000
union jobs through buyouts and attrition, and reduce
workers’ retirement benefits.27 Across the Hudson River,
yet another Democrat, New Jersey governor Jon Corzine, also
used the threat of layoffs to get state workers’ unions to
agree to an eighteen-month wage freeze and ten unpaid
furlough days, a giveback worth $304 million.28 Across the
country, in Washington State, Governor Christine Gregoire,
another Democrat, submitted a budget that eliminates funds
for pay raises that the state had previously negotiated with
unions.29 There are similar examples from other states.
Organized labor’s failure to resist concessions has lowered the living
standard of all workers. According to the BNA’s Wage Trend
Index, annual wage growth in 2009 will be about 2 percent,
as the economy will “eliminate any ability for the vast
majority of workers to negotiate higher wages,” said
Kathryn Kobe, the economist who worked on the report.30
The recession will accelerate the transformation of the U.S. into a low-wage
economy–a trend that is already far advanced. As the New
York Times’ Louis Uchitelle wrote last year:
“The $20 hourly wage, introduced on a huge scale in the middle of the last
century, allowed masses of Americans with no more than a
high school education to rise to the middle class. It was a
marker, of sorts. And it is on its way to extinction…. The
decline is greatest in manufacturing, where only 1.9 million
hourly workers still earn that much. That’s down nearly 60
percent since 1979, the Bureau of Labor Statistics
reports.”31
What’s more, household income was propped up only because of the
increasing role of women in the workforce– that is, it
took two (or more) incomes to achieve the living standards
that one wage earner could have supported previously.
As the Economic Policy Institute noted with the release of the State of
Working America 2008/2009, “although the economy has
expanded by 18 percent since 2000, most Americans’
household income does not reflect that growth. Quite the
opposite: real income for the median family fell by 1.1
percent from 2000–2006. A small increase in the median
family’s hourly wages (1 percent) was more than wiped out
by the 2.2 percent drop in annual work hours. Moreover,
whatever wage growth occurred since 2000 was based on the
momentum from the 1990s recovery–wages did not improve at
all over the 2002–07 recovery”.32
As measured in today’s dollars, the State of Working America authors
note, “from 1979 to 2007, wages are up only slightly, from
$16.88 in 1979 to $17.42 in 2007, a growth of just 0.1
percent per year over nearly 30 years– virtually stagnant,
despite some rapid growth in the late 1990s.”33
In the recovery of the 2000s, the share of national income going to profits
reached a forty-year high. This change in the distribution
of national income, the authors’ estimate, is “the
equivalent of transferring $206 billion annually from labor
compensation to capital income.”34
For African Americans, as always in U.S. capitalism, the system is
qualitatively worse, owing to the legacy of slavery and the
persistence of racial discrimination. The Black jobless rate
in May 2009 hit 14.9 percent.35 If there is still a
controversy among economists whether to call this downturn a
recession or depression, in Black America there’s no
debate.
In short, U.S. workers are experiencing a rapid and sharp drop in income,
employment, and living standards, with slim opportunities
for improvement in the foreseeable future. This will have
far-reaching social and political consequences. The aim here
is to try and frame some of the questions facing the labor
movement that will arise from this crisis.
The one-sided class war
The 1960s and 1970s are remembered as the heyday of the civil rights and
antiwar movements. But it was also a time of worker
rebellions in the “basic industries” of auto, steel, and
coal mining as well trucking. Much of a revived
revolutionary left threw itself into union organizing.
Then came the PATCO strike of 1981. President Ronald Reagan used the full
power of the state not only to replace 11,000 striking air
traffic controllers, but also to obliterate their union. The
signal to employers was clear: It was open season on unions,
and “concessions bargaining”– negotiations in which
unions surrendered pay and benefits–became the norm.36
The obliteration of PATCO also encouraged further government intervention in
strikes, from routine injunctions limiting picket lines to
violence by police deployed to protect strikebreakers. The
National Guard was used to violently break strikes by
Arizona copper miners in 1983 and Minnesota meatpackers in
UFCW Local P-9 in their heroic 1985–86 strike against wage
cuts.37
A decade later, striking newspaper unions in Detroit abided by court
injunctions and violent police tactics that shut down
effective, militant mass pickets during the opening weeks of
the long Detroit newspaper strikes.38 In January 2000, South
Carolina state troopers attacked a picket line in
Charleston, S.C., which led to five longshore workers being
placed under house arrest for more than a year until a
solidarity campaign forced charges to be dropped.39
The heavy hand of the state ensured that most picket lines would remain
symbolic rather than active attempts to stop production, as
they had been in the militant struggles of the 1930s.
Striking unions adopted the slogan, “one day longer” to
show their willingness to outlast employers.
Workers sacrificed enormously in what were often valiant, but losing,
battles, such as the Illinois “War Zone” struggles at
food processor A.E. Staley, heavy equipment maker
Caterpillar, and tire maker Bridgestone/Firestone.40
The big exception to this pattern is the victorious 1997 Teamsters strike at
UPS–a big employer was caught flatfooted by workers’
solidarity and widespread pro-union sentiment. UPS could
make no serious attempt at strikebreaking.
But UPS was able to use its political connections to mount a campaign
against then-Teamster president Ron Carey, who was elected
on a reform slate. In the months after the strike government
overseers of the union removed Carey from office for
campaign violations by his staff, even though Carey, who
passed away recently, was later cleared of all wrongdoing in
federal court.41
In the post–PATCO labor movement, the heaviest judicial hammer has come
down on Transport Workers Union (TWU) Local 100, which
represents 38,000 bus and subway workers in New York City.
In 1999, a judge put in place an injunction in which fines
of $25,000 for strikers and $1 million against the union
would double each day of the strike. After the union did
walk out for sixty hours in 2005, a judge imposed a fine of
$2.5 million on the local, banned the automatic deduction of
union dues from workers’ paychecks, and ordered the brief
jailing of union president Roger Toussaint.42 Local
100–already weakened by ex-reformer Toussaint’s
highhanded administration–has yet to recover.43 The New
York injunctions were apparently the template for the judge
who banned the planned one-day strike by L.A.
teachers. This hard line recalls the late nineteenth and early twentieth
centuries, when unions routinely faced “injunction
judges,” violent attacks on picket lines by police and
armed forces, and naked class justice.
In this environment, unions have all but abandoned the strike as a weapon.
In 2008, there were just fifteen work stoppages involving
1,000 or more workers, compared to 424 in 1974. In the last
two decades, there have never been more than fifty-one such
work stoppages in a given year.44 Less union militancy led
directly to organizational decline, Moody writes:
“[Unions] grew when they fought for something and in
particular, as in the 1960s and early 1970s, when they
fought to sustain or increase power in the workplace.
These days, the notion that growth and militancy have any connection, except
possibly a negative one, is angrily dismissed by precisely
those who lay the greatest claim to strategies for
growth…above all…the SEIU.”45
A bureaucratic solution to union decline?
Labor’s long crisis led to the victory of John Sweeney’s New Voices
team, which took over the AFL-CIO in 1995. Sweeney’s team
gave a liberal makeover to the stodgy Cold War federation
apparatus, and promised a labor renewal. (Under Sweeney
there was also a repackaging of, but not a fundamental
change in, the AFL-CIO’s largely government-funded foreign
policy operation, notorious for its collaboration with the
CIA.46 That, however, is beyond the scope of this article.)
To survive, Sweeney’s AFL-CIO developed a strategy with
four basic elements: (1) encourage mergers with other unions
to compensate for shrinking membership; (2) organize in
industries that cannot be shipped overseas, such as in
health care, hotels, and construction; (3) collaborate with
management to try and gain employers’ neutrality in union
elections; and (4) pour big money and member activism into
electing a Democratic president and Congress in the hope of
prolabor legislation.
This approach is pursued by both the AFL-CIO, the historic national labor
federation, and the Change to Win (CTW) coalition, which
broke away in 2005. It’s a perspective that fits the needs
of the top levels of the union bureaucracy. The top union
officialdom functions as a buffer between capital and labor,
and, in the U.S., most embrace that role enthusiastically.
Far removed from the shop floor (if they ever worked there
at all–many are lifetime staffers), leading U.S. union
officials have a lifestyle and social connections that tie
them more closely to management and politicians than to the
rank and file.
While crises and splits in the union hierarchy can open the door to reform
candidates and pressure from the membership, the union
bureaucracy will at best vacillate unless pressed forward by
rank-and-file action.
And that’s exactly what today’s union leaders are keen to prevent. While
their methods differ, both the UAW’s Ron Gettelfinger in
the AFL-CIO and SEIU president Andrew Stern in Change to Win
have essentially the same goal: create a union machine that
is unaccountable to, and impregnable against, the rank and
file. Stern’s method is to create gigantic “locals,”
often more than 100,000 workers that span one or more
states, run by people who were appointed or installed
through electoral maneuvers orchestrated by union
headquarters.47 In this way, Stern, argues, SEIU can have
the clout to force employers into neutrality agreements. Yet
this has most often involved top-down organizing in which
the workers are passive, even unknowing, recipients of union
membership.48
Stern’s scorched-earth effort to destroy the oppositioncontrolled United
Health Care Workers-West with dismemberment and trusteeship
is only the biggest and crudest expression of the
authoritarian rule that has become the norm in SEIU.
Stern’s authoritarianism was on display in April when
hundreds of SEIU members were sent to physically attack the
Labor Notes union activist conference outside Detroit as
part of a dispute with the California Nurses Association
(CNA).49 Stern called off the dogs a year later and made
peace with the CNA and its affiliate, the National Nurses
Organizing Committee, which led to trades of members in
Nevada hospitals, a move that, as union democracy organizer
Herman Benson put it, left “nurses on both sides feeling
like bartered chips.” This, in turn, was part of a complex
regroupment of the CNA and registered nurses into a new
185,000- member union affiliated with the AFL-CIO.50
The SEIU’s deal with the CNA wasn’t a case of Stern turning softhearted,
however. The deal preempted an emerging alliance between the
nurses’ union and the new National Union of Healthcare
Workers (NUHW), which was founded by leaders and members of
the SEIU’s United Health Care Workers-West after the local
was put into trusteeship by the SEIU International.51 In any
case, the seamy side of Stern’s regime came to light, as
corruption scandals took down two important union leaders in
Southern California and another in Michigan.52
In defense of these organizing methods, Stern and his supporters claim that
workers are more interested in power than democracy.53
It’s true that SEIU has had major success in organizing
mostly immigrant janitors after achieving a breakthrough in
Los Angeles in the early 1990s. But as Moody points out, the
L.A. janitors’ real wages fell by around 10 percent
over the course of two consecutive fiveyear contracts.54
More recently, the SEIU policy of “bargaining to
organize” has led to strict limits on traditional union
workers’ rights, including the right to speak out on bad
conditions in nursing homes. The agreements also included a
low wage increase and bans on strikes.55 In Stern’s eyes,
the crime of Sal Roselli, who was then president of the
SEIU’s United Heathcare Workers-West, was to resist such
deals and challenge the SEIU’s approach to partnership. 56
Now head of the new National Union of Healthcare Workers, Roselli has the
support of tens of thousands of SEIU members, most of whom,
for the moment, are legally prevented from joining the new
union, which calls for a fighting, democratic labor
movement.57
For his part, the UAW’s Gettelfinger is also seeking ways to preserve the
bureaucracy by making it as independent from the rank and
file as possible. The means to do so was to be the retiree
health-care trust fund handed over to the union by GM,
Chrysler, and Ford under the terms of the last contract. Now
that those funds give the union ownership stakes in GM and
Chrysler, the union itself will be the enforcer of harsh
working conditions, lower-tier pay, and a ban on strikes.
Of course, unaccountability and hostility to rank-andfile militancy have
long been the norm in the U.S. labor bureaucracy. But Stern
and Gettelfinger have pushed bureaucratic control to new
extremes. Their argument to the rest of the labor movement
is that the union machinery must do whatever it takes to
survive. In this view, unions must help make employers
profitable and minimize, if not eliminate, union democracy
in order to permit leaders to make difficult, unpopular
decisions. This will allow the unions to survive and rebuild
a new base among different sections of workers in nonunion
industries.
Moody calls Stern’s program “corporate bureaucratic unionism,” a leap
beyond even the class collaboration of traditional American
business unionism.58
The rest of the union bureaucracy hasn’t gone as far in this direction as
Stern and Gettelfinger. But many union leaders would do so
if they could. Indeed, the issue in the 2005 split in the
AFL-CIO had more to do with control over money and resources
than any clear-cut differences over labor or political
issues. Essentially, Stern and the leaders of the other CTW
unions–including unions of workers in health care, food,
farms, trucking-driving, and construction sectors–no
longer wanted to be dragged down by the declining
manufacturing unions that remained in the AFL-CIO. Splitting
the federation didn’t resolve those issues; neither will
the proposed reunification ahead of the AFL-CIO convention
set for later this year.
Another failure for labor law reform?
Whether or not they reunite, the AFL-CIO and CTW are both focused on trying
to pass EFCA. The employers have made it clear that they
will do whatever it takes to prevent this “armageddon,”
as the head of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce called it.59 But
the shift of momentum to the employers recalls labor’s
last two failed attempts to pass labor law reform under
Democratic presidents Jimmy Carter in 1978 and Bill Clinton
in 1994, which went nowhere despite Democratic control of
Congress.60
Some in the labor movement have criticized EFCA as an effort to substitute a
legal mechanism for the hard work of organizing the
unorganized.61 Certainly, EFCA in itself wouldn’t overcome
all the problems that have hindered union organizing for
decades: bureaucratic, topdown methods that use arbitrary
checklists and timelines rather than cultivating and
encouraging rank-and-file militants over the long term;
jurisdictional disputes that pit rival unions against one
another as they compete for “hot” shops; and a
reluctance to use job actions and other militant tactics to
pressure employers.
Jerry Tucker, a former UAW regional director from the New Directions reform
caucus and a leading labor activist, argues that EFCA
won’t automatically make it easier to organize unions.
“I would take it back to labor’s culture,” he says,
“its actual activity and what it represents to workers.
Organized labor doesn’t represent a movement at this point
that workers can attach themselves to–where they feel a
certain sense of upsurge or upward momentum.”62 Moreover,
EFCA wouldn’t necessarily lead to the kind of strategic
focus needed to rebuild the U.S. labor movement. Crucially,
no union has been willing to commit the resources necessary
to organize (or reorganize) the critical supply chains of
trucks, trains, and warehouses that are integral to
today’s just-in-time production methods. (The failure of
the Teamsters’ poorly planned and ineptly run 1999-2002
strike for unionization at the Overnite trucking
company–now UPS Freight–highlighted this failure.)63
The most import thing about EFCA or similar legislation is that it could
reinforce the idea that there’s a federally protected
right for workers to organize. As in the 1930s, when
organizers used New Deal legislation to claim “your
president wants you to join a union,” today’s union
officials and rank-and-file activists could use EFCA to
encourage workers to be confident to organize. They can use
Barack Obama’s own words as justification.64
The United Food and Commercial Workers (UFCW) took an important step in this
direction when it used the EFCA debate to relaunch its
effort to organize Wal-Mart.
But even the best labor law reforms won’t overcome the crisis of organized
labor. As U.S. labor history demonstrates, unionization has
increased not in small increments, but in great upsurges of
struggle, as in the 1930s.
Immigration and the unions
Amid the latest escalation of the employers’ relentless war on labor there
are also signs of the possibility of renewal.
On May 1, 2006, millions of immigrants and their supporters marched in
cities across the U.S. against proposed federal legislation
that would have criminalized the estimated 12 to 14 million
undocumented people in the United States. In response,
immigrant labor took to the streets. As Moody points out,
companies in industries heavily dependent on immigrant
labor–from the Port of Los Angeles/Long Beach truck
drivers to meatpackers to textiles and landscaping
services–were shut down for the day, demonstrating the
power of immigrant labor in those sectors.65 These actions
revived May Day, International Labor Day, in the country
where it began during the struggle for the eight-hour day in
1886. The marches were won of the biggest displays of
workers’ power seen in the U.S. in many years.
The impact of the immigrant rights demonstrations underscored big
demographic changes in the U.S. population– especially in
the working class. Moody sees the new prominence of
immigrant labor as evidence of a third great demographic
transformation in the U.S. working class, following the
earlier wave of immigration at the turn of the twentieth
century and the changes wrought in the mid-twentieth century
by the mass African American migration into the cities, the
North, and industry, and the large-scale entry of women into
the workforce. Each of these changes posed challenges to
organized labor, which sometimes rose to the occasion
(uniting white and African American workers in the old CIO
mass production industries, for example) but often did not.
Today, he notes, “immigrants are already attempting to
organize in a variety of ways. The question is, are the
strategies and structures of today’s unions fit for the
job?”66
To be sure, many unions, especially the SEIU and UNITE HERE, have for many
years sought to organize immigrant workers. Those efforts
resulted in a historic policy shift in the AFL-CIO in 2000,
when the union’s executive council voted to call for
amnesty for undocumented workers. This is a big break with
the past, when most unions saw immigrant labor as a threat
and supported restrictions on immigration. In 2003, the HERE
union of hotel workers helped organize “Immigrant Freedom
Rides” across the U.S., linking the historic struggle of
African Americans for civil rights to immigrants’
willingness to struggle.67
But even as the immigrant rights movement erupted in 2006, labor became
consumed in a debate over whether to support employer
programs for a guestworker program. The SEIU and UNITE HERE
favored this approach, collaborating with employer
organizations to advance the agenda; the AFL-CIO opposed
it.68 It wasn’t until President Obama began pushing for
immigration reform legislation that the AFL-CIO and the
Change to Win federations agreed on an approach that opposes
guest-worker programs and proposes a national commission to
decide on future levels of immigration of permanent and
temporary workers.69
This is a step forward from supporting guest workers, even if it fails to
live up the AFL-CIO amnesty position of 2000. But the unions
are still far from coming to grips with the changes that
immigration has brought to the U.S. working class–and the
potential to organize in a radically different way. In the
big May Day marches of 2006 and 2007 in Chicago, for
example, unions easily could have passed out flyers
announcing informational meetings in immigrant neighborhoods
in and around the city to explain how the marchers could
unionize their workplaces. The self-organization that
enabled uncounted numbers of workers to negotiate with
bosses for time off–or together plan not to show
up–could have been the starting point for workplace
organization.
However, most union officials, locked into the narrowest cost-benefit
analysis of organizing, simply couldn’t grasp the fact
that immigrant workers were willing and able to organize
themselves. Other union officials may have understood that
potential–but were unwilling or unable to give their full
backing to a movement that was beyond their control.
Organize the South–or die
A key focus of Moody’s U.S. Labor in Trouble is the shift in
production to the South. While there certainly has been a
shift in jobs overseas, the numbers are questionable, Moody
points out, because much of the job loss is the result of
technological change that makes a smaller number of workers
vastly more productive. As a result, even though the number
of manufacturing workers in the U.S. now stands at 12.3
million –a drop of 5 million over the past decade70– the
U.S. remains a fundamentally industrial economy: “the
ratio of service output to goods and structures, as the
government measures these, has not changed much in almost
half a century…. The industrial core remains the sector on
which the majority of economic activity is dependent. Hence
it is the power center of the system.”71
The continued centrality of production could allow U.S. manufacturing unions
to retain their clout, despite job losses. But the unions
have not only failed to maintain wages and conditions in
their historic bastions, they’ve been unable to follow
work into nonunion facilities, particularly the South. Here
labor is paying a steep price for its historic failure to
confront racism directly during the era of Jim Crow
segregation. In the late 1940s, the old CIO’s Operation
Dixie organizing drive was stillborn as Southern employers
used both racism and anticommunism to attack any and all
efforts to organize Black and white workers. “Only a
confrontation,” writes labor historian Sharon Smith,
“with Southern white supremacy could have paved the way
for organizing success.” But the CIO at that time was busy
purging and raiding the leftled unions that were willing to
take on that challenge, and its support for the Democratic
Party made it incapable of challenging the party’s
segregationist Southern wing.72
As a result, in the postwar era the South became an attractive locale for
both U.S. and foreign capital. The region has become home to
most of the auto “transplants” owned by German and
Japanese companies, all of which are nonunion despite
repeated efforts by the UAW to organize workers. The picture
is similar in other industries: by 2000, 30 percent of
manufacturing jobs were in the South.73
Even where labor has made inroads in the South, the unions’ pursuit of
corporate partnership and aversion to rank-and-file activism
has been ill-suited to the fierce resistance they’ve
encountered. A particularly telling example of this is the
struggle of the Freightliner Five, leaders of a UAW local at
truck plant in North Carolina. When the workers led a brief
strike in April 2007, they were fired. Four of the workers
had been leaders of the organizing committee that helped
compel the company to recognize the UAW a few years earlier.
Yet rather than defend these militant, diverse
leaders–three of the workers are Black, one is a
woman–the UAW excluded them from membership by the union
local president. Two got their jobs and union memberships
restored in arbitration.74
An important exception to labor’s losing streak in the South was the
UFCW’s organizing campaign at the huge Smithfield pork
processing plant in Tar Heel, N.C. Despite years of setbacks
through company violations of union election laws, firings
of union militants, and general repression–including an
in-plant jail–the union prevailed.
Key to this was outreach through workers’ centers to both immigrant and
African-American employees, and on-the-job organizing that
made the union’s presence felt.
Long before the union officially won the right to represent employees, the
union became a resource for immigrant workers coping with
the threat–or reality–of job loss and deportation by
supporting a walkout against a raid.
For Black workers, the union was key to the successful fight to win Martin
Luther King Day as a paid holiday.75
Reviving social movement and class-struggle unionism
The Smithfield victory provides a glimpse of how labor can win even against
a hostile employer. But labor’s unwillingness to embrace
social movement unionism– among immigrant workers and in
general–highlights the larger reasons behind the unions’
repeated failure to organize the unorganized. As Kim Moody
explained: “While the blame for so many not getting a
chance to choose a union lies heavily with the employers and
a broken [National Labor Relations Board], the labor
leadership must take a good deal of collective
responsibility.
This isn’t just the lack of organizing effort by many unions, but the
long-standing, top-down business union practices (or worse)
of most of those who are organizing in the private
sector. You can’t be a union member unless you are, or are
about to be, part of a recognized bargaining unit. You
can’t even be part of an organizing drive these days
unless your employer was targeted by the strategists at
union HQ. If you are part of an organizing effort that fails
(by card check or election) you’re out.
If the union wins recognition but fails to get a first contract and gets
decertified, you’re out even if you voted to keep the union. All of these practices are self-imposed, none
are required by law. There are a handful of unions that are
now practicing non-majority unionism, such as the UE and
CWA. And the AFLCIO and some unions have given a measure of
recognition to worker centers and immigrant workers. But
most top union leaders don’t want members or allies who
aren’t under their control. This needs to change.”76
The example of UE should be emphasized. Once the largest union in the old
Congress of Industrial Organizations founded in the 1930, it
was decimated in the late 1940s and 1950s by a series of
splits and raids orchestrated by rival unions because of its
left-wing leadership that included members of the Communist
Party. Nevertheless, UE has survived as a small but vigorous
independent national union of about 35,000 members, one that
has in recent decades focused heavily on immigrant
workers.77 UE’s militant and democratic approach to trade
unionism was vindicated in December 2008 during the
successful six-day occupation at the Republic Windows and
Doors occupation in Chicago. The occupation was organized by
workers to demand severance pay after the company announced
that the business was closing its doors.
Overnight, a factory occupation–something usually reserved for labor
history books on the 1930s and nostalgic speeches at union
conventions–became a focal point for working-class
resistance amid a profound economic crisis.
The widespread attention to the fight even inspired a California “green”
window manufacturer to buy the plant, with plans to hire
most, if not all, Republic workers.78
That militancy didn’t develop overnight. Republic workers had decertified
two conservative and corrupt unions before joining UE in
order to build a fighting, democratic union. Those years of
struggle laid the basis for the battle of December 2008.By
day three of the occupation, the importance of this fight
was clear to millions of working people across the United
States. “This is the end of an era in which corporate
greed is the rule,” said James Thindwa, executive director
of Chicago Jobs with Justice. “This is the start of
something new.”79
Crucially, the Republic workers–most of them Latino immigrants, a minority
African Americans–became the faces and voices of the U.S.
working class as it faced the worst economic slump in
seventy years. At a spirited December 9 rally of several
hundred outside the occupied plant, UE Local 110 President
Armando Robles got an especially loud cheer when he
declared, “We are America,” a popular slogan from the
immigrant marches of 2006. This time, it was a reference to
the entire working- class majority in the United States.80
Rebuilding the labor movement in a changing working
class
Does the Republic Windows workers’ victory represent, to borrow the
overused cliché from the business press, the first “green
shoots” of a recovery for labor? Or will the UAW’s epic
collapse foreshadow yet another series of retreats and
defeats for the unions? Can the independent National Union
of Healthcare Workers establish a model of democratic,
member-driven, militant unionism?
Or will the SEIU’s corporate-style gigantism predominate, as shrinking
unions seek mergers for survival in a perverse realization
of the old Industrial Workers of the World dream of creating
“one big union?” These questions can only be answered in
the struggles of the months and years ahead. But what is
already clear is that the depth and length of the economic
crisis means that organized labor will have to fight like
hell to just to keep its ground, let alone advance. But
reviving class-struggle unionism –to use another term from
labor’s past– will be a painstaking task. Complicating
the process is the fact that the generation that led the
last wave of labor resistance in the 1970s is nearing
retirement or is out of the workforce already due to job
loss. And given the low level of union struggle since PATCO,
a younger generation has little or no experience of unions
as fighting organizations. As some academic labor relations
experts noted, “the reduction of strike activity has
created an environment in which the general public, and
perhaps some union members have little conception of what a
strike is or does.”81
Resistance, nevertheless, continues. Crisis-driven government budget cuts in
the months and years ahead makes public-sector strikes in
particular more likely.
Teachers are in the crosshairs, as the crisis combines with the “school
reform” agenda to give school boards additional leverage
to attack seniority, impose merit pay, and create nonunion
charter schools. Private employers too are using the crisis
to push for givebacks that finally forces a showdown, as
several long, recent strikes, such as the one at the Stella
D’oro bakery in New York City.82
The potential for a labor victory that could change the dynamics is there.
Certainly the Los Angeles political establishment was
relieved at the judge’s order that banned a teachers’
strike, lest it become a popular rallying point for working
people fed up with attacks on the education of working-class
kids.
Other elements of labor revival may well come outside the established unions
altogether. Moody calls attention to the network of
workers’ centers that meet the needs of nonunion workers,
often immigrants, to help pursue wage-and-hours claims and
assert their legal rights. He also points to the Coalition
of Immokalee Workers, the organization of nonunion immigrant
tomato-pickers who waged a successful campaign to force Taco
Bell, the corporate customer for their tomatoes, to pay a
higher price to finance higher workers’ wages.
McDonald’s surrendered next.83
To this list could be added the Starbucks Workers Union (SWU), a project of
the IWW. Although it lacks formal collective bargaining
rights and represents workers in a relative handful of
stores, the SWU has, through tenacious organizing, made
gains on the job, reversed firings of union activists, and
won precedent-setting cases before the National Labor
Relations Board.84
These creative efforts highlight the possibility for new organizing. Yet
there also needs to be a strategic focus to rebuilding the
unions in the heart of production and distribution.
For it is there that workers have the greatest leverage to reverse the
decline of their class and begin to make gains.
This point is rightly emphasized by Moody. He points out that the lean
production system–minimizing inventories, for
example–has created several choke points for U.S.
industry. To rebuild their muscle, unions must reconquer, or
conquer anew, lost ground in the ports, on trucks, in the
warehouses and on the railways. At the same time, unions
have to finally make the commitment to organize Southern
industry, a task that will require an explicit commitment to
fighting racism, long-term preparation, and, ultimately,
courageous actions that draw upon the traditions of the
civil rights movement. Opposition to racism will be
essential in efforts to both organize immigrant workers and
serve as their advocates amid xenophobic attacks from the
right as it seeks scapegoats for the current crisis.
Entering such battles will require a kind of politics very different from
that put forward by union officials, who typically follow
the dominant trends inside the Democratic Party. What’s
needed is independent working-class politics.
This doesn’t mean prematurely declaring the existence of a workers’
party, but rather building on the basis of political
independence of the working class. This will necessarily be
a long-term project, one that applies the lessons of
labor’s largely buried radical history to new conditions.
For that reason, the new debate on socialism in U.S. politics should be
taken up inside the labor movement.
While socialism re-entered political discussion as a rightwing epithet for
Barack Obama’s policies, there is a genuine interest in
socialism as an alternative to today’s crisisridden
system. Left-wing labor activists should seize the moment to
bring socialist politics into the workplace– not only as a
vision of a more egalitarian and democratic society in the
future, but as a way to inform how workers organize and
fight today.
To be effective militants today, union activists need to assimilate the
lessons of previous generations of socialists who rejected
labor-management partnership and promoted class-struggle,
social-movement unionism. It was those socialists,
communists, and other militants, not the established union
leaders, who led the battles that transformed the U.S. labor
movement. The 1934 general strikes in Toledo, Minneapolis,
and San Francisco and the sit-down strikes in auto and other
industries a few years later couldn’t have happened
without that rank-and-file upsurge. The expansion of
public-sector unionism in the 1960s couldn’t have been
achieved without the civil rights and Black Power struggles
that involved and inspired millions of African-American
workers.
In today’s crisis, as Sam Gindin argues, the survival of organized
labor–let alone its revival–will require bold new
approaches: “This is an historic moment that challenges us
to think big or suffer even worse defeats. Faced with
immediate needs, workers and their union have too often
shied away from taking on larger issues of social change
that seemed too abstract, too distant, too intimidating. The
lesson however is that if we only focus on the immediate,
the options we have are always limited. We are all now
paying the price of that failure to think bigger….
In this context, what is truly unrealistic is not new options, but the
notion that stumbling through the present crisis will
preserve past gains or bring new security.”85
Where and when the next upsurge will come is impossible to predict. But with
capitalism in a protracted crisis– and the system more
discredited than in any time in decades–the conditions for
a fightback are developing.
And despite the catastrophe in the auto industry and the seemingly endless
stream of bad news for workers, the Republic Windows and
Doors victory points the way towards a renewed, fighting
labor movement. Melvin “Ricky” Maclin, vice president of
UE Local 1110, spoke for millions of workers the night that
the Republic workers won: “I feel wonderful. I feel
validated as a human being.
Everybody is so overjoyed. This is significant because it shows workers
everywhere that we do have a voice in this economy. Because
we’re the backbone of this country. It’s not the CEOs.
It’s the working people”.86
Notes:
1 Dan Clawson, “A battle for labor’s future,” Z Magazine, June
2009.
2 Ruby Wolf, “Civil war in UNITE HERE,” SocialistWorker.org, March 31,
2009, socialistworker.org/2009/03/31/civil-war-inunite-
here.
3 Harold Meyerson, “Unifying unions,” Washington Post, April 7,
2009.
4 John D. Stoll and Sharon Terlep, “UAW discloses terms of GM deal,”
WSJ.com, May 26, 2009.
5 “Obama administration auto restructuring initiative–General Motors
restructuring,” the White House, June 2009,
www.whitehouse.
gov/the_press_office/Fact-Sheet-on-Obama-Administration-Auto-
Restructuring-Initiative-for-General-Motors/.
6 Robert Reich, “No reason for public involvement in GM,” Marketplace,
June 1, 2009. marketplace.publicradio.org/display/web/
2009/06/01/pm_gm_bailout_comm/.
7 Sam Gindin, “The auto crisis: putting our own alternative on the
table,” The Bullet/Socialist Project E-Bulletin No. 200,
April 9, 2009.
8 Jon Ortiz, “State pay cut likely; how it’s done is the question,” Sacramento
Bee, May 31, 2009.
9 Herbert Sample, “California provides example for Hawaii plan,”
Associated Press, June 3, 2009.
10 Gillian Russom and David Rapkin, “Battle intensifies in LA schools,”
SocialistWorker.org, May 19, 2009, socialistworker. org/
2009/05/19/battle-intensifies-in-la-schools.
11 “The labor agenda,” New York Times, December 28, 2009.
12 Shobhana Chandra, “Slower U.S. job losses signal recession is starting
to ease,” Bloomberg News, June 6, 2009.
13 “Statement by Chad Stone, chief economist, on the December unemployment
report,” Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, January
4, 2009.
14 Josh Bivens and John Irons, “A feeble recovery: The fundamental
economic weaknesses of the 2001–07 expansion,” Economic
Policy Institute, December 9, 2008.
15 Heidi Shierholz, “Jobs picture,” Economic Policy Institute, June 5,
2009.
16 “Union members in 2008,” Bureau of Labor Statistics, January 28,
2009, 1.
17 Costas Panagopoulos and Peter L. Francia, “Labor unions in the United
States,” Public Opinion Quarterly (New York),
Volume 72, Number 1, Spring 2008.
18 “Union members in 2008,” 3.
19 David Moberg, “Wooing unions for Obama,” Nation, October 13,
2008.
20 Tom Hamburger, “Labor unions find themselves card-checkmated,” Los
Angeles Times, May 19, 2009.
21 “YRC Teamsters to vote on 10 percent cuts,” Teamsters for a
Democratic Union, December 3, 2008, www.tdu.org/node/2571.
See also John Schulz, “A YRCW-Teamsters deal reached,”
Gerson Lehrman Group, December 3, 2008,
www.glgroup.com/News/
A-YRCW-Teamsters-Deal-Reached.-Remember–Its-a-Journey-
Not-a-Sprint.-29554.html.
22 “Bargaining calendar is fairly light, but some early reopeners
expected,” Labor Outlook 2009, Bureau of National
Affairs, January 29, 2009.
23 Randy Christensen, “CWA gets ready for a fight,” SocialistWorker.
org, March 25, 2009,
socialistworker.org/2009/03/25/cwa-readyfor- a-fight.
24 Darrin Hoop, “Boeing strike ends in union win,” Socialist-
Worker.org, November 4, 2008,
socialistworker.org/2008/11/04/boeing-strike-ends-in-win.
25 Christopher Hinton, “Boeing plans to slash 10,000 jobs as the economy
weakens,” MarketWatch, January 28, 2009, www. marketwatch.
com/story/boeing-plans-to-slash-10000-jobs-as-theeconomy-
weakens.
26 Paul von Zielbauer, “City labor unions agree to reductions in health
benefits,” New York Times, June 3, 2009.
27 “Unions, Paterson reach agreement to avoid mass layoffs,” Albany
Business Review, June 5, 2009.
28 “Corzine, union deal avoids layoffs,” Associated Press, June 4, 2009.
29 Adam Wilson, “State wins union lawsuit: Gregoire can shelve contracts,
judge says,” Seattle Times, February 12, 2009.
30 “Slowdown in rate of wage growth to continue, BNA index shows,”
Bureau of National Affairs, January 15, 2009,
www.bna.com/press/2009/specialreports/wtijan09.htm.
31 Louis Uchitelle, “The wage that meant middle class,” New York
Times, April 20, 2008.
32 “For most, economy yields more of less,” Economic Policy Institute
press release, August 28, 2008, www.stateofworkingamerica.
org/ news/swa08_pr_final.pdf.
33 Lawrence Mishel, Jared Bernstein and Heidi Shierholz, The State of
Working America 2008/2009 (Washington: Economic Policy
Institute 2008, advance PDF edition), Chapter 3, 12.
34 Mishel, et al, State of Working America, Chapter 3, 42.
35 Shierholz, “Jobs picture.”
36 Kim Moody, U.S. Labor in Trouble and Transition (London and New
York: Verso, 2007), 108–10.
37 For excellent accounts of these struggles, see Jonathan D. Rosenblum, How
the Arizona Miners’ Strike of 1983 Recast Labor-Management
Relations in America (Ithaca, N.Y.: Cornell University
Press, 1995) and Peter Rachleff, Hard-Pressed in the
Heartland: The Hormel Strike and the Future of the Labor
Movement (Boston: South End Press, 1993).
38 James Bennet, “After 7 weeks, Detroit newspaper strike takes a violent
turn,” New York Times, September 6, 1995.
39 The story is told by Suzan Erem and E. Paul Durrenberger, On the
Global Waterfront: The Fight to Free the Charleston 5 (New
York: Monthly Review Press, 2008).
40 See Steven K. Ashby and C.J. Hawking, Staley: The Fight for a New
American Labor Movement (Urbana and Chicago: University
of Illinois Press, 2009).
41 Joe Allen, “Remembering Ron Carey,” SocialistWorker.org, December 16,
2008, socialistworker.org/2008/12/16/rememberingron- carey.
42 Steve Downs, Hell on Wheels: The Success and Failure of Reform in
Transport Workers Union Local 100 (Detroit: Solidarity,
2008), 20, 45.
43 Amy Muldoon, “Taking back the TWU,” (Interview with Marvin Holland),
SocialistWorker.org, May 15, 2009, socialistworker.org/
2009/05/15/taking-back-the-twu.
44 “Major work stoppages in 2008,” Bureau of Labor Statistics, February
11, 2009.
45 Moody, 101.
46 Kim Scipes, “An unholy alliance,” Znet, July 10, 2005, www.
zcommunications.org/znet/viewArticle/5864.
47 Steve Early, Embedded with Organized Labor (New York: Monthly
Review Press, 2009), 218 –24.
48 Brian Cruz and Larry Bradshaw, “Roots of the crisis in the SEIU,”
SocialistWorker.org, April 25, 2008, socialistworker.org/
2008/ 04/ 25/roots-crisis-seiu.
49 Ibid.
50 Herman Benson, “Nurses now for sale, barter and trade,” Union
Democracy Review, March–April 2009.
51 Randy Shaw, “The shocking SEIU-CNA alliance,” BeyondChron, March 21,
2009.
52 Paul Pringle, “SEIU spending scandal spreads to Michigan,” Los
Angeles Times, August 26, 2008.
53 Sustar, “Behind the UNITE HERE merger,” Socialist Worker, July
23, 2004.
54 Moody, 195.
55 Brian Cruz, “Will SEIU obliterate a California local?” Socialist
Worker.org, January 9, 2009, socialistworker.org/2009/01/
09/willseiu- obliterate-a-local.
56 Mark Brenner, “Trusteeship looms for dissident SEIU local,” Labor
Notes, February 2009.
57 Clawson, “A battle for labor’s future.”
58 Moody, 196–97.
59 Steven Greenhouse, “After push for Obama, unions seek new rules,” New
York Times, November 9, 2008.
60 Sustar, “A new labor movement?” International Socialist Review, Issue
1, Summer 1997.
61 Mishel, et al, The State of Working
America.
62 Sustar, “What can turn labor in a new direction?”, (Interview with
Jerry Tucker), SocialistWorker.org, April 11, 2008,
socialistworker. org/2008/04/11/turn-labor-new-direction.
63 Tom Leedham, “The road ahead runs through UPS Freight,” TDU.org,
March 16, 2006, www.tdu.org/node/153.
64 Sustar, “A new battle over the right to organize,” SocialistWorker.
org, November 21, 2008,
socialistworker.org/2008/11/21/battle-overright-
to-organize.
65 Moody, 211–12.
66 Ibid., 78.
67 Alan Maass, “Freedom ride for immigrant rights,” Socialist Worker,
October 3, 2003.
68 Sustar, “Labor and immigration,” Socialist Worker, May 5,
2006.
69 Julia Preston and Steven Greenhouse, “Immigration accord by labor
boosts Obama effort,” New York Times, April 14,
2009.
70 “Unemployed exceed manufacturing jobs,” Manufacturing
Technology
News, April 17 2009.
71 Moody, 39.
72 Sharon Smith, Subterranean Fire: A History of Working-Class Radicalism
in the United States (Chicago: Haymarket Books, 2006)
189–92; 197–98.
73 Moody, 45
74 Sustar, “Split ruling for Freightliner Five,” Socialist Worker,
November 7, 2008.
75 David Bacon, “Unions come to Smithfield,” American Prospect,
December 17, 2008.
76 Kim Moody, “A few additional thoughts on the new situation,”
contribution to the Center for Labor Renewal listserve,
November 23, 2008.
77 Jim Wrenn, “UE ‘non-majority’ union organizes the old-fashioned
way,” Labor Notes August 2002; Steve Bader,
“Pre-majority” public workers union makes gains in North
Carolina,” Labor Notes, September 2002.
78 “Chicago window factory reopens with occupying workers back on the
job,” Democracy Now! May 15, 2009,
www.democracynow.org/
2009/5/15/chicago_window_factory_re_opens_with.
79 Sustar, “A rallying point for labor,” SocialistWorker.org, December
8, 200,
socialistworker.org/2008/12/08/rallying-point-for-labor.
80 Sustar, “Republic workers target Bank of America,” Socialist-
Worker.org, December 10, 2008, socialistworker.org/2008/12/
10/ workers-target-bank-of-america.
81 Paul F. Clark, John T. Delany and Ann C. Frost, “Private sector
collective bargaining: Is this the end or the beginning”
in Clark et al (eds.), Collective Bargaining in the
Private Sector (Ithaca, N.Y.: ILR Press, 2003), 4.
82 Jessica Carmona-Baez, “Stakes get higher at Stella D’oro,”
Socialist Worker.org, June 4, 2009,
socialistworker.org/2009/06/04/stakesget-
higher-stella-doro.
83 Moody, 219–20; Helen Redmond, “McDonald’s caves to farmworkers,” Socialist
Worker, April 20, 2007.
84 Adam Turl, “Standing up to Starbucks,” SocialistWorker.org, April 17,
2009,
socialistworker.org/2009/04/17/standing-up-to-starbucks.
85
Gindin, “Auto crisis.”
86 Sustar, “Victory at Republic.”
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